I regularly brew both 23L beer kits and 23L wine kits (Beaverdale, Kendridge, Atmosphere) and I find the wine kits a bit easier and less time consuming than beer, mainly because I bottle the beer so there are 48x500ml bottles to sterilise and rinse vs 30x750ml wine bottles.
For degassing I use one of these degassing sticks
https://www.home-brew-hopshop.co.uk/degassers-paddles-spoons/471-stainless-steel-degasser-23l.html which attaches to an electric drill. I found the plastic degassing stick very unsatisfactory - plastic particles grind away where the stick goes through the bung, and drop down into the wine (thankfully they float so can be removed during siphoning). With the stainless steel degassing stick the bung is made of hard nylon so that doesn't happen.
In general I've found the timetable for 23L wine kits is something like:
- About 10 days for the primary fermentation, then rack into the secondary.
Although the kit instructions say that fermentation can continue for another 2 weeks, I always find that the SG is already pretty much at the target after just 10 days. For example I'm making the Beaverdale Gewurztraminer at the moment, and on day 10 it had already gone from 1.084 to 0.994, ie. it's already at the target SG.
- Maybe another 5 days just to be sure that fermentation is done (but as I say, it essentially is).
- 2-3 days for the degassing and stabilising stages, and adding the finings (kieselsol and chitosan).
- 5-7 days to clear.
- Bottle.
so 4-5 weeks from start to finish, and with white wines the result is perfectly drinkable straight away. The best wine kit I've ever made was the Vineco Atmosphere Amarone, which I'm sure is meant to be stored for years before drinking, but actually after only a couple of months it was astonishingly good, and the equal of £20 bottles I've tasted.
With beer kits it's often 10 days primary, 5 days dry hopping, 2 weeks priming in the warm, and 2 weeks clearing, so a bit longer than white wine.